The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 2, 1905, Page 7

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RARR RAR ARERR * * *® = Plans are about ready for the ® \* extension of the Seattle-Tace- & * ma Interurban further ®| ® into the menufoeturing die ® triet In the southern part of ® | ® the city, ‘The track now comes #& }® mH on Connectiout street and ® ® ends on the « hwest corner *® of dor Jugy, he vas} woof Atlanth t The new ® ash me mit his fet | ® plans are arranged to have the@® et ger tree wad I gerrr-abbit | & K enter block and run © grout mit my fists und hold him | ight through the manufac. #| Bs Ld de « between, vile I se district *! fer der poleese ; | * * Pane auch WAY Henry Det Pee eee hie fight with ed 8, = .w-y ne a, pet ne is sulng gor $1.0 he who to ffs peraon | Jamages h | ay one “The defendant Dobson | od od his version of the figh pe co showed that the a Cree when the two little | defendant began to te ag peat te crying out “Dutehy! - “ hes mimicking his dialect and] = Aavicos were recelved In Seatth ! t : allusions to sauerkraut. = jtoday to the effect that the Yukor B. wane eeentment of the plaint fe river between White He and ut him to deal vigorously WIth) Dawson would break up ten days ~ ers, and it we, wien | carlton than was expected. The father took thelr part that | news reach here in a telegram : ¢, with a large rye . from R. A, Carrol, agent of the ta, took place, The - two combatan ne Alaska Steamship company, at or itt claims that ‘- bile me al Skagway, to Frank Burna, superin 4 4 to hold ee rm shee bo age aed the company at Seattle. fhe patice ; @ telegram stated that the foe * paanly took advantage of my = m6 was out of the river from White 4 him around the " see yy. | Hl@rme to the upper La Barge, and re crn. and disco! | trom lower La Barge to Big Salmon ‘ering one ‘ s In Lake La Barge the ice is rotten ‘Detiman was.awarded $1 damages) ing may go at any moment. All ‘the along the river the lee has broken in sections, but le held by numerous jams, The favorable elt the river is the result of the warm weather which has prevailed during the past two weeks. Reports from | the Intertor and the mountain dia triets along the river show that the [snows are melting and the streams are badly swollen The thaw at the present time has not reached a stage sufficient to af ford any grounds for apprehension and ft 9 thought the jams will break before enough water reaches the lower levels to cause an overfiow of the country, Vessel have al ready left White Morse for Skag- way, confifent that the breaking up f the river will ecour within @ short notice. medicines at We Whea buy = are buying health GUARANTEE , fall weight and measure at prices, A PINT OR A POUND ws means 1€ ounces. Some give you only 12 ounces, SPECIAL Olive Oil, g IN PAYS TO DEAL AT LANG'S FREE DELIVERY \NG DRUG C2 COLMAN BUILDING. First Ave. Middle of Block. Combis and Marion. jand the warrant issued by Justice t——_7,\0. V. Davis. Tower aays that Lane Opt iT: | came to him a few days ago with a “hard luck story,” and he took and in ft toeclaliet of $3.50 diaxee $2.67 AND SAMPLE IT regular A warrant fs out for the arrest of Edgar Lane, a buteher shop em- ploye, who is supposed to have left the city om the Great Northern flyer Tuesday morning to evade prose- cution for petty larceny. EL B. Tow or was given a complaint by Assi Monday night he went to his room and found Lane asleep. He locked |the door and hung his trousers by the bedside. Tuceday morning the him to his lodgings at wide ex- erty. the city for a trace of Lane, 4 | 006 TO SE? TLE BOARD BILL Mra Alberta S. Frye claims that her little spits dog, which she valuce at $175, and which she says was lost through the negligenen of the Hotel Ceefl, should offset the board bill of herself and family. Some time ago the plaintiff brought repievin pre ceedings against the hotel to recover three trunks, a baby-perambulator, ® highchair and certain other ar theles alleged to have been wrong- fully held by the hotel. The defendant answered, alleging in indebtedness of board and lodg- ing, upon which It claimed the ar- ticles were held. In repty, the plain- Uff filed an affidavit Tuesday morn- ing, stating that a $175 dog, which the defendant had agreed to care for for 25 cents per day, had been lost through carelessness and that by reason of this the indebtedness was not only cancelled, but that $1 specific damages and 85.000 generul damages were due the plaintift. A. Trower, residing at the corner of Eighteenth avenue and Jackson street, reported the looting of his bunkhouse Monday night. thieves carried off clothing and foot- wear. Cc. J. Betl, of 424 Twenty-second avenue south. reported bis house en- tered and two bicycles stolen Mon- day night. | of GOODS WENT WITH Him ant Prosecuting Attorney Whitham | Interbay. | ‘The | THE SEATTLE STAR—TU ai MAY 2, 1905. READY FOR THE JURY (My Bortoos News Asan? NEW YORK, May District Attorney Rand made closing addrews: for the prosgeution of Nan Patterson this meting The room was so crowded with spectators that the doors were locked. Attorney Rand said that if Young | did not procure the revolver, he did Bot shoot himself, The revolve wae bought on June 3 at the pawn j shop of Hyman Stein, The prose cution has accounted for every min | ute of Young's thu | 2. —Asaistant his court he had not bought a revolver, Tho a dd shawn no reason why |Young should commit suicide, aad Rand showed the peculiar mechan iam of the revolver which made tt necessary to Press a button in the handle the same time anyone would pull the trigger. He decta if the jurymen could shoot them selves as Young was shot, they could set the girl free, He pointed out that reflex action could not ac eount for the finding of the re Volver in the right-hand pocket after the man’s spine and a lung had been shot in two, as suggested by the defense, Francia jarvas, who is assisting mecutor Rand in the progecution, sald this afternoon that the case will not go to the jury until to- morrow. At Ballard BEAT AGED Mra Marie Davis, aged 60, ls now lying unconscious at the hospital with o large cut im ber head, caused by blows received from J. B. Avery, who beat her on the head with rock. Avery is an old man of 70 years, who has a family in Ballard, but for some reason or another lites alone in an old shack on Spring street. Tuesday morning he armed himeelf with a revolver and pick- ing up a large rock went to Mra. Davie’ house and called her out- side. Just as she opened the door he attacked her and, throwing her beat her unmercifully on the head Some people who were passing at the time and saw the affair started to interfere, but Avery threatened [to shoot them. They immediately } He reached his hand in his back to secure his revolver, but the chief was too quick for bim a had him covered. When brought to the station he was asked why he beat Mra. Davia. He anid that she had been continually driving her cattle past bis door and annoying him. Mra. Davis has « very bad cut io the back of her head. The attend- tng physician says that she wil! not be able to appear tn court for some time. Several of the people of Ballant who know Avery persona —— that be is not in bis right mi! CASHIER I8 SHORT. | KANSAS CITY, Mo, May 2.—The | State bank at Waverly was closed | by the seeretary of state today. The bank examiner found @ discrepancy of $20,000, twice the bank's capital, |im the accounts of Cashier Lowi | who left town a week ago. It is re- | ported that Lewis has been specu- | lating and lost heavily. | COURT NOTES | George Martin plead guilty Tues- day morning to the charge of forg- ory. Margaret Hawkaworth has brought muit for divorce agsinet John Hawkevorth on the ground of ex- treme cruelty. Plaintiff says that the defendant, who ts a boilermaker, repentedly beat her and called her vile names, } You can't get away quality, style, durability. when you buy Burt & And there's a reason, too know something more than time, All styles, all sizes, $3.50 and $4.00 GIVE THE SHOE A TRIAL—YOU'LL COME AGAIN. Opp. Teale-Hills—Look for the Burro’s He And this is what you buy ard “Korrect Shape” Shoes for men. years of shoe making—we ought to people about shoe leather by this M. F. McDONALD, 1408 2d Ave Listen to This from comfort and Pack- Forty most on June 3 and} | 4 that} | ERE e ye Fido hun u Mia Adelaine Glass, of Ratn- * fer Beach, avers in a letter to fhe Star that she has a large black dogerI@® who doesn't * rm his board, and sho is will ing to sacrifice him in a& great * caune All she asks is that the com. * miasary general of the sons of # nature call and get the dog * * ee LITTLE HAPPENINGS Ryan & Newton ceived a crate | straw berries | * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * have again of Vashon Isl they are selling them at $9.75 per crate, Several cars of enbbages arrived on commission row Tuesaday morning in very good condition. Green onlond, radishes | and lettuce are arriving in the best | of condition, | A spectal car of Modern Wood men of America left Tuesday morn ing on the Great Northern for Spo kane, There were more than 40 members in the party, Members of the drif! team are very confident | }of winning the $200 prize to be lgtven to the best drilled team in| | the state, | A pile of lumber fell on Frank | Perry, & young man employed by |the Woody Lumber company, tn of Charles Hila leg their yards at the foot street on Railroad avenue. |was broken and the ambulance called. Perry was taken to the Pa eifie hospital The aceident oc red at 9:15 o'clock Tuesday morn ing erry and a number of other laborers were engaged in piling | lumber. In some manner the pile was unbalanced and it toppled over, | falling Perry. The others es- | caped injury. William K. Barr, formerly a lodg- | er at 902 Fifth avenue, attempted fo | evade payment of $40 for room rept | and board, contracted at the redi dence of Mra. W. Moore. He did not far, as City Detectives Adame and Corbett picked him up on a charge of defrauding a landlord anda warrant was sworn out Tue | day for his arrest. A formal com- | plaint has Seen filed againat him. Patrolman Cameron wae lookita for Uhings Monday night. Two telp- [ scope arips and a sewing machihe are duly tagged at police headquar- ters and await the rightful claim- an The grips were picked tp near the Pacific Const Steamatip| mpany’s dock at the foot of Waxh- ington street. The sewing machine Wos found at the Weat Seattle ferry silp. Annie Rooney was “soaked” again Tuesday morning for loiterts around saloons Police Judge ¢ don gave her a 30 days’ jail mon tenes. She was arrested by Patrol- men Rrafford and Hubbard, Steamship Senta Barbara, Gny & arrived im Seattle Tuesday from San Franctaco with! 609 tons of freight and 43 paasen- gers, The Santa Barbara will sail from Seattle Sunday for San Fran- elaco. H& LOS? THIS TIME ¥. Yoshida. a Japanese porter, fatled to anewer to bis same in Police Judge Gordon's court Turs- day morning and ball of $25 wae forfeited. Patrotmen Hubbard and Brafford stated on the witness stand that W. J. Wilson, a late arrival from Honolulu, and the porter got into a mixup in the restricted dis- triet and the Jap hurled his antag- onist the full length of a statr- way. Wilson's face certainiy bore the appearance of a desperate en- counter, He waa fined $10 for fighting. Patrolman Brafford thought at first that Wilson was dead, but he revived at the police station and Acting Dr. Jailer Cor- bett locked him op. The fight oc- curred Monday morning. \ GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colo. May 2.--Owing to a storm and mud- dy roads, the moving of the preat- dent's camp to Bast Divide was de- layed, as well as Secretary Loeb’s departure for this city. SPRINGFIELD, Ill, May 2.—The house today passed a bill to give municipalities the right to fix the ‘Price of gas SAY IT IS A NUISANCE Merchants who operate businegs establishments slong the waterfroet clare that the blowing of whteti¢a| by the veawels of the mosquite fleet prior to their departure from thet unbeats | city in a source of almont Th able nuisance to them dozen or more small ¥ ply between Seattle a points }about Puget sound which blow co#- before they actually get away frotd the whar Of course, the steamers pelled to nd the cast-off whintle, and, when leaving the wharves, they jare forced to blow again in order to warn any vessels which might be| passing. They cannot help that, and| lin doing #0 are only complying with the law. What the merchants are up fn armas against ts the incessant | are ce lnhrieking of the vessel's whistles which are sounded to bring passen- gers to the wharf in order to prevent thelr being left. One rehant stated morning that his opinion the whistling of the vessels for the pur pose of warning prospective pasnen gers won unwarranted, Captain list, of the fireboat Snoqualmie, stated that the continuous whistling of the vessel kept his from sleeping when It becarne for them to do #o in the day During a little front the marine Star heard adverse men necessary time. 1 along the of sf s0Jo The porter comme ay ern Washington and Western Brit-| | tinuously almost every five minutfelunxtous to bring passengers to the| versity of THREE MORE ARRESTS AUTOIST6 SANDORGER, STIMSON AND RENNINGEN MYST AP- PEAR IN POMSCE COURT TO ANSWBR TO CHARGES OF SPEEQING THEIR AUTOS TOO FAST The trial of James N. Sandvigen, ; his positive views on the subjed@ W. Stim n and Dr, B. W. Ren) was brought about by witgesaing 4 ningen, for whose arrest warrants | collision between an auto cycle and were Ixsued aday morning on|an automobile at the corner of & charges of violation of the city's | ond avenue and Union street a few ajeed ordinances, were powtponed | days ago. The auto cycle was torn to Wednesday morning, when the | to pieces and the rider barely o@ cases were called Tuesday after- | caped serious injury, if not death noon in Justice Gordon's court Progmore ways the automobile | The three mon were “spotted” wy | was being driven at a high rate of Detective Phillips last Saturday,| speed and that the occupants jand éach one of them was found | laughed at the affair and tried to to be driving his auto faster than | joke it off. A crowd gathering. the law permits threatened violence, but the auto ists took the man to one side and Anaintant Prosecuting Attorney | fixed it up on the spot Prigmore expressed himself as en-| “L think The Star has the right tirely satisfied with The Star's | ‘hunch’ in this fight, and I like the fight against reckless autoists, in| way the paper is handling the an Interview Monday, The call for * aid the prosecutor. Talks on | fight } figh COUNTERFEITS A letter from headquarters of the secret service department at Wash . lington was received by Captain Bell, the local agent, Tuesday. The feit bills are in eireulation through: Jout the states of the most dan 7 — |gerous nate The bill is shorter ‘eit He he Egy Bem pg By? {he land narrower than the genuine bill jan chief ide. In spots the colors making red blotches over On the back aide it is }with the picture of an In on one | have run the surface, returned New ish Columbia, has Just from @ three weeks’ trip York and gives this version of the | to considerable darker than the ordi Equitable Life Assurance Bociety’s | S20 rack bilL The work is affaires. . supposed to be done by experts in In the first place, contrary to the | the business, as one would hardly general belief that the Equitable Life was, or is, in any financial dif ‘feulty, the rumor ts altogether us detect anything unless they knew of their circulation. founded. The soctety’s affairs were | never in better shape or the policy | holders’ interests more securely guarded than at the present time. President James Alexander, be- leving that it would be for the beat Interests of the policy holders and the society that the polley holders be given the right to vote and elect the directors, has been pushing the idea of mutualization along so vi orously that in doing so he has, a & matter of course, stirred up some opposition to his plana, hence the rumors of the past month. The general agents from all over the United States and Canada met in New York on the 18th inat. and voted almost unanimously endors ing the plan of mutualization as set forth by President Alexander. Th‘» action on the part of the general agents of course stirred up more opposition and consequently more stories. The legislature of the state of New York has been asked to carry out President Alexander's plans of mutualization, which he expeets will The body of Herman Oleson was found floating near the Wayside Bmergency hospital at 1 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, He was 34 years old and had been an inmate of the Bmergency hospital in March. On March 24 he was discharged and sent to the county hospital. One of the nurses from the Wayside saw Oleson on Washington street Mon day afternoon. It is thought that the man committed suicide by Jump- |img from the dock. The case was | reported to the coroner's office and Depaty Coroner Arnold took the body to the Bonney-Watson morgue. WAN) HM TO QUIT be done in the near future ‘ecient A committees, of which 1! Cl vw yors. ate : - * : 4 y President Frick, of Pittsburg, Pa. is chairman.) aieswnder, it ie stated, today has is now Investigating the charges and counter charges made by and against the different officers of the society, and declares that even if al! the charges made were proven to be true it would not affect the | Deen naked to resign from the Equit- able by the Frick committee and that he showld induce Vice President Tarbell to restan in the interest and Welfare of the society. It is under- | stood that he has promised to with- financial standing of the society./ daw and that Hyde's retirement The 600,000 American policyholders | 411) ronow shortly after of the Equitable Life have a right we to know that the money they have F 0 invested is properly saf’ guarded, and this committee, it ir belleved. will so report. Aa & matter of fact there le no trouble in the Equitable Life As- surance seolety at all that Im any way affects of should alarm any prenent poltey-holder or anyone contemplating mew assurance. The Equitable Life, as tt stands today, as could many other excellent in-| surance companies, clowe ite doors to new business and with the aesets| TACOMA, May 2.—~The brewery on hand, pay every policy it | strike was settled here at 1 o'clock materet. today. Brewers have been given The soctety’s new business for the) an advance in wages of $1 and the firet four months of the present year! engineers an advance of $2. Other is weveral millions ahead of what It! questions did not come up at the wag Inst year up to the present time. | conference. ‘This would Indicate that tn the east. | panne ere ern states where the large share of| A committee of the so-called de- the society's business comes from,| mocracy of Poland and Lithuana people pay very little attention to) has issued a manifest, proclaiming what the newspapers at the presenta general strike in consequence of all “The Equitable’s Trouble.” yesterday's bloodshed. tim — was for eal man, to succeed Prof. Bowers tn the every business man who | physics department. Mr. Wilson to endure the disturbance. The merchants say the whistling| bas an excellent reputation a ia unnecessary because people who| teacher. have to travel on the vessels will get} It is almost a certain fact now there on the appointed time if possi-| that the battleship Oregon will be bie for them to do. In sounding a} brought to the Puget Sound navy half hour, a fifteen, a ten, and «| yard for repairs, Congressman W five minute, then again the cast-off| EB, Humphrey received a letter from whistle and the whistle blown when! Secretary Darling, of the navy de- the vensel ix leaving the dock, the| partment, to the effect that the Merchants are compelied to have| ship would undoubtedly be brought their stuck in their ¢ here, although the date Is not defi f ty the whole time. It would not/ nite. The repairs will cost about Tie so bad, they state, if all of the | $1,000,000. ateamers would blow simultaneous-| Monday night the steamer Ex- ly, but that is an impossibility. The | celsior, of the Northwestern Steam- that for a half hour|ship company, ealled for Valdez, | Sewart and other northern ports. The board o ents of the Unt- Washington announce | that the first annual session of the ey Pee ,, | #ummer school for library training The receipts of the county clerk's | ig to open June 1. The course will office in fees during the month of| he limited to 26 students. April exceeded even the record| p MM. Peterson visited at police month of March, the total being | headquarters Tuesday morning. Pa $4,606.30, a8 against March's total |troiman W. B. Kent brought him of $4,409.70. Clerk Otto Case sa@ys/ trom a point on First avenue where wonsequen mt a time, abrieking the air ie filled with the and tooting of steamers! Wharf. |there bas been a regular increase| he had narrowly escaped breaking | in the county's litigation and a con-/ his neck by falling from the street sequent Increase in the filing fee receipts. street grade. Patrolman Milliken Tho school board of directors ap- | also assisted in placing Peterson in pointed J. B, Wilson, an Iillinols'the patrol wagon. “jt CURED MY RUPTURE | Will Show You How to Cure Yours rr . me * Twas helpless and bed-ridden for years from a double rupture, No truss could hold. Doctors said | would die if not operated on, «fooled thom all and cured myson by astmple discovery. I will As AGS ond the cure free by mall if you write fot It, It cured me and has ince cured thousands. Itwillourg you, Write today. Capt. Way Collings, Box ex7, Wat rtown, N, ¥, into a vacant lot 30 feet below the | fe) STILL IN TROUBLE THE O'BRIEN SCHOOL WRAN- GLE 8088 UP ONCE MORE » O'Brien school ¢ has had already a lib tr in now In & worse ithan ever, It was only lay That the county 1a hon | after « nting ft miueh & | petition for # division of Disirlet No, 145, leaned back im thelr big leather chairs, drew a long breath and settled down for @ period , of | Deace | But early Monday morning Dis triet No, 146 was before Ub aa a and this time in @ more entangled | state than ever. The eleme wbich |had held out against consolidation jand vigorously opposed division was on hand with # long list of | pusziing questions, with which the distracted commissioners were con with their of hat whould they do children now that they had been ficially cut off from the district in which the school house was locat ? Would they not be in con |tempt if they continued to send thelr progeny to the cut-off school? From whom will the teachers |their pay? They were hired jeourse, by School Distriet No but which of the two new districts ] was cut off from the other, and if | District No. 145 is responsible for |the teacher's salaries, which of the |two districts has the misfortune to be entitied to that number? How about the appointment of new di rectors, and where is the new school ming from? Also property are the « en of the school-house leas district to be kept in school during the rest of the term, a quired by law? These and a grist of other que tions were put to the commissioners by the excited O'Brienites, the noon hour the w not being able to solve the brob- lem nor to sucessfully sluff the dif re perintendent, who is out of town SOLDIERS KILLED @y Scripps NW KL. PASO, May 2.—Reports have reached here today that a body of Mexican regulars were defeated by a band of Yaquis in the southern portion of Sonora. Nearly all the troops were killed and a number captured. RIOT CHICAGO, May 2.~At State and Taylor streets thia afternoon a riot was precipitated by a negro driver on one of Montgomery, Ward & Co.8 wagons, who fired into a crowd that was following the o avan. The crowd began throwing missiles, and the negro was pulled s Asn? from his seat. A wild scrimmage followed, in which the following were injured Leonard Weber, white, shot in the neck, probably fatal; J. W. Howe, detective, knocked unconscious; | Guy Bittinger, detective, stabbed ia the bead; six colored men serious- ly injured. A large number more or leas hurt. Twenty-five police- men arrived and began clubbing the bystanders. A thousand people par- ticipated in the melee. There was no change in the Sea- men's union and the Longshorem: jeontroversy Tuesday. The members of the sailors’ union say ft will be impossible for the longshoremen to hold out against them. The sailors’ union will not allow its men to work on vessels which employ the longshoremen, when to do so would be to grant them their demands in the present controversy. HONGKONG, May 2.—The steam- er Deva Wengsee, which arrived to- day from Balkok, reports the sight- ing of 28 vessels of the Russian Baltic fleet on April 29, 60 miles north of Mamranh bay, SETTLED After four years of litigation the suit of George Iverson, 20, against the McDonald Shingle Mill com- | pany, of Ballard, has been settled out of court. Tuesday morning the company handed over to Iverson $1,250, and an aditional amount for costs, Four years ago the young man lost three fingers and a part of one hand while working in the Ballard mill | He was awarded $2,000 damages Jin his suit, but the case was sent back for a new trial by the su- preme court The funeral arrangements for the cremation and interment of Chin Yuen, an aged and well known Cel- estial who died recently at Juneau, Alaska, are not yet complete, The local Chinese intend to give Yuen an elaborate ceremony and the many friends of the dead man will jfollow in carriages. The body lies lin state at the parlors of the Bon \ney-Watson company. Yuen was a (Free Mason and will be buried un der the auspices of the Chinese Ma sonic lodge, how | | fieulty upon the county school su- | ook for the Red Cross Bartell Always Cuts the Prices Listerine, D0 cococivcsecs 150 Lister’s Tooth Wash bottles - ° 15e 4711 Glycerine Soap, 20¢ cakes 10@ ip Tablets, 25¢ -.1Te Carter's Cold and ¢ boxes . Cascarettes, 25¢ boxes Paine's Belladonna Py lbe kind ... Dr. Price’s Arnica Liniment, 56e bottles eerancceser 350 | Pinand’s tes. Villard’s Bau de Quint tes .. 50c bot- «+s. B50 » Se bot- «+ B66 ja de Quinine, Prescriptions filled by painstaking druggists with medicines of knowm merit. Pa rt Jackets Custom Tailored $6.50 em G.W. BOYNTON’S ONE-MAN SAW The wonder of the world; 50c per 1207 2nd Ave. Next to Stone. Fisher & Lane 3, 3%, 4, 4% and §-foot lengths, ~ 2 A good warranted : 50-foot Cotten s i Hose ....93.50 3 2 Same Hose, 25 % JE toot .....91.75 = 150 feet 2-inch 3 H H mesh Poultry -'s ; Netting, 24 in. s 3 wide ....$1.30 3 § + 150 feet 2-inch “| G mesh Poultry & 3 i Netting, 36 in. 2 a wide $2.00 s 3 150 feet _2-inch g & S mesh Poultry ' & f Netting, 48. in. 5 & wide ...,$2.50 o ; A fine little Lawn Fy Pe | Mower ..$2.95 Ge : A fine fancy Mor- z ’ we tised Screen *g3 a Door, any size ole ayer 8S, Common Screen ous Doors, walnut or | color, mortised * eecedes ski 'C. W. Boynton Saw Company 300 Pike Street If, any evening, your y of The Star has not arrived at 6:00 o'clock, telephone—Sunset, Main 1050, or Ins dependent 1188, any time between 0 and 7:00—and a copy will be at once special mes- a by

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